Unit 1. Dreamweaver 8 Basics – notes---see Planning a Web Site below
Unit 2. The Dreamweaver Interface – Chapter 1
Unit 3. Defining a Site – Chapter 1
Unit 5. Establishing Web Links - Chapter 2
Unit 6. Inserting Images - Chapter 2
Unit 7. Setting up Tables – Chapter 3
Unit 9. Interactive Forms - Chapter 4
Unit 4. Working with Text - Chapter 1 and 5
Unit 12. Working with Layers - Chapter 6
Unit 13. Using Behaviors – Chapter 4 and 6
Unit 11. Using Dreamweaver Templates - Chapter 5
Unit 8. Using Frames- Chapter 7
Unit 12. Working with Layers -Chapter 7
Unit 10. Adding Multimedia Elements -Chapter 8
Planning a Web Site
Planning Basic –purpose
- Purpose and goal
- create a purpose statement
- Consider 12 types of Web sites
- Target audience
- Identify who they are
- Gender, age, profession, etc
- Computer proficiency
- Web technologies
- Broadband-DSL, Cable modems, etc
- Baseband- dial up
- Web site comparison
- Visit similar web site
- What do you like or don’t like?
Planning Basics- Content
- Value-added content
- Topic
- How much info
- How to attract your target audience
- Methods used to have them return to site
- What change do you need to make
- Text- bulk of web page
- Keep it simple
- Check spelling and grammar
- Use common words
- Bulleted list
- Images
- Have common logo/theme
- Available
- How to locate
- How to create
- How many per page
- Color-palette
- Do selected colors work with your goals
- Are the colors a part of the universal 216 colors (browser safe)
- Limit the number of colors
- Multimedia
- Animation, audio, and video
- Will users require plug-ins(Shockwave, Adobe Flash, and Windows Media Player)
Web Site Navigation
Design Basics
- Navigation Map (Site map)
- Outline the structure of the entire web site showing all the pages within the site
- Acts a road map linking all the pages
- Structure
- Linear- users navigate sequentially, moving from one page to the next
- Hierarchical –a better way to organize complexbodies of info; requires thorough organization
- Web- also called random structure. Fewer restrictions; associated with the free flow of ideas(can be confusing)
- Grid- if your web site consists of a number of topics of equal importance such as a user’s manual
Developing a Web site
1. Typography(appearance and arrangement)
2. Images
3. Page layout
4. Color
Reviewing and testing a Web site
Publishing a Web site
- Domain name
- IP address
- Domain Name system (DNS)
- Uniform Resource Locator(URL)
- Hypertext Transfer Protocol (ICANN)
Maintaining a Web site
- Change; update info
- Check for broken links; add new links
- Document the last change date
Methods and Tools Used to Create Web Pages
- Text editor ex. Notepad
- HTML or XHTML editor ex. More supplicated version of notepad
- Software applications ex. Microsoft Word, Publisher, etc ,WYSIWYG ex. Dreamweaver, Microsoft FrontPage, etc
Web Site Languages
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange(ASCII)- most widely used coding system to represent data
- Extensible Hypertext Markup Language (XHTML)- authoring language that displays a Web page and make it compatible for web browsers
- Hypertext Markup Language (HTML)- primary language of the web